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The tribal patriot

5/2/03
Butch Brun was a patriot in every sense of the word. He was deeply concerned about the well-being of the tribe, and we of Red Lake should appreciate that he set aside his well-earned retirement, came back into office, and devoted the last months of his life to at least setting us on the right course...More

Equity in gaming long overdue

April 18, 2003
The Minnesota Gaming Equity Act is the “big news” in Minnesota Indian country this week. The intent of the bill is, obviously, to provide for more equity in the distribution of revenues from Indian gaming in the state, which is long overdue. It is also obvious that the bill is being used by some to break the casino monopoly currently enjoyed by Indian tribes in Minnesota...More

Press/ON congratulates ward-winning Indian journalist Paul DeMain

April 11, 2003
Press/ON would like to congratulate Paul DeMain for winning the Payne Award for Ethics in Journalism for his years of work in investigating and reporting on Leonard Peltier’s involvement in the murder of two federal agents on the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1973, and the 1975 murder of Anna Mae Pictou-Aquash...More

Court debunks myth that audits are “trade secrets”

April 4, 2003
It was gratifying to learn on Tuesday this week that the Minnesota Court of Appeals threw out a Ramsey County District Court decision which had found that Minnesota tribal casino audited financial statements were trade secrets and therefore non-public under the Minnesota Data Practices Act...More

Minnesota Gaming Equity Act will test party ideology

March 28, 2003
I have long used this column to advocate for equity in Indian gaming in the state of Minnesota, and after twelve years of Indian casino monopolies, the time is long overdue for change.

Less than one-half of one percent of Minnesota’s population currently benefit in any way from Indian casinos. As far as Indian people in Minnesota are concerned, less than ten percent of the 60,000 – 70,000 Indians enumerated in the 2000 Census receive any benefits from “Indian gaming”...More

This week in Indian country

March 21, 2003
It’s been an eventful week. The opening salvos of the war in Iraq began Wednesday night. This overwhelming event far overshadows any other issues that we’ve been working on this week. Press/ON invites our readers’ comments, insights, and perspectives, and we’ll start printing them next week.

Press/ON also invites those who have a family member involved the war to send a copy to this paper. For the duration, we’ll be printing their photos and short descriptions. Indian people have served this country with distinction in previous wars, and I suspect that it will be no different this time...More

"Rule of law” comes to Leech Lake reservation, maybe

March 14, 2003
On Thursday, March 13th, Leech Lake secretary/treasurer Archie LaRose got nine hours before a tribal court judge, and at least a taste of “due process” in the recall petition dispute between LaRose and some other members of the Leech Lake RBC...More

Editorial: The rule that almost was: the saga of ‘full faith and credit’

March 7, 2003
The Minnesota Supreme Court made their decision on Wednesday, March 5th to not accept the ‘full faith and credit rule’ proposed by the Tribal Court / State Court committee.

We have written a lot of words on this important issue, and if you look at the money, time, and effort that has been spent by the proponents of the rule, mostly tribal attorneys / judges who don’t have to be under the jurisdiction of tribal courts, it all seems like just a big waste. The whole Tribal Court / State Court Forum was a sham, because key members had already made up their minds and plotted out their agenda before the seven-year process even started...More

Did tribal PACs purchase political disfavor in 2002?

February 21, 2003
...We feel it is important for tribal membership to know where all our money goes. The amount of Indian PAC money has been rising steadily over the past few years as casino revenues grow, and as political influence becomes increasingly significant in maintaining Indian gambling monopolies and in competing for federal and state funds...More

Leech Lake people give Pete a second chance

February 14, 2003
The Leech Lake people gave Alfred “Tig” Pemberton a second chance on the tribal council when they elected him chairman in 1992. At his victory party, he thanked the people for a second chance, and he told me that he was going to “do it right” this time, because Tig was coming back into office with a lot of baggage.

Tribal-state casino faces many obstacles

January 31, 2003
In the 2002 legislative session, the Minnesota legislature considered seven separate proposals to expand gambling in Minnesota. Last February, the House Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs decisively rejected all seven, effectively ending the state’s contemplation of getting into the gambling business during last year’s legislative session...More

The rule of law

January 24, 2003
“The rule of law” has been a foreign and only very rarely heard phrase on Leech Lake and most other Indian reservations. Usually “the law” is what the tribal council or reservation business committee says it is, and that depends upon who is sitting on those entities at whatever time (and that changes with every election), as well as to whom “the law” is going to be inflicted or applied...More

‘State of the Band’ plays the same old tune – where is accountability?

January 17, 2003
We have published the full text of the “State of the Band” address by Mille Lacs chair Melanie Benjamin in this issue of Press/ON. The mood of this year’s speech appears to be much more conciliatory and constructive than last year’s very combative speech, although she reiterated last year’s call, “We are now fighting for the very existence of our homelands. There are times when we have no choice but to stand and fight. This is one of those times...More

The culture of corruption at Leech Lake

January 10, 2003
New defenders of the culture of corruption on the Leech Lake reservation are promoting their own selfish agenda under the banners of “justice and peace” and gender equality.

Leech Lake vested interests profiting from the corrupt status quo have finally poked their heads out from under a rock under the misleading name of “Equay Wug for Justice and Peace”...More

Reflections on a year of change in 2002

December 20, 2002
This is Press/ON’s final edition of the year 2002. During these last days of the year, it’s always interesting to take a few minutes to reflect back and consider whether we in the Native community are better off at the end of this year than we were at the beginning. It’s definitely a mixed bag...More

'Planetary power'

December 13, 2002
Roman Sigana, an old friend who passed to the Happy Hunting Ground all too soon last year, spoke English as a forcibly-imposed second language and had no compunctions about revising ‘the English’ to fit his own understanding of the world.

Roman would sometimes walk into Press/ON’s Bemidji office with a sheaf of documents, objecting vigorously to the ‘planetary power’ asserted by the U.S. Congress over Indian people...More

State budget deficit will be felt especially hard in Indian country

December 6, 2002
The recently announced state budget deficit of $4.65 billion couldn’t come at a worse time for Minnesota’s three largest Indian reservations, Leech Lake, Red Lake, and White Earth. All three are facing enormous debt problems due to previous administrations’ investing too heavily in destination resort type expansions to their casinos...More

Forensic audits let genie of accountability out of the bottle at Red Lake and Leech Lake

November 29, 2002
The forensic audits underway at Red Lake and Leech Lake should prove to the be incident that caused the genie to be let out of the bottle as far as accountability and open government is concerned. Once the people find out just how badly their financial affairs have been and are being mismanaged and misused they’ll be so outraged that they will demand changes in leadership and governmental structure to provide checks and balances so this can’t happen again...More

RLTC to face difficult budgeting priorities for 2003

November 22, 2002
It’s been nearly nine months since a recall petition forced Red Lake tribal treasurer Dan King from office. Since that time, all of his supporters in the council have either resigned or have been defeated in tribal elections, and a forensic audit and other reviews of his financial management are underway...More

Did tribal PACs purchase political disfavor in 2002?

November 8, 2002
We have devoted a great deal of time and space to publishing tribal Political Action Committee (PAC) campaign finance reports.

The information in this edition only includes campaign contributions for candidates running for Minnesota state offices. It does not include campaign contributions for federal or local offices, and we will publish that information as it becomes available...More

Paul’s legacy

November 1, 2002
This is the last issue of Press/ON before election day next Tuesday. With the tragic death of Senator Paul Wellstone, his wife and daughter, and his staff and plane crew, it’s hard to maintain enthusiasm and interest in the election.

Wellstone served twelve years on the Senate Indian Affairs Committee. We know that he was extremely interested in Indian issues and Indian affairs, and a dedicated and sincere advocate. Wellstone was deeply concerned about the issues, and devoted both his own energy and that of his staff toward what he felt were the best interests of the Indian community...More

Buying the status quo is killing us

October 25, 2002
With elections for federal, state and local offices just a little more than a week away, it is important for our readers to know what’s going on behind the scenes. The information about campaign contributions published in Press/ON over the past few weeks has not usually been publicly disclosed in Indian country. This week’s issue includes additional information about tribal PAC contributions, and next week we plan on publishing a summary of the campaign finance reports slated to be released in the next few days...More

Hunt’s legacy

October 18, 2002
The precedent-setting recall of Eli Hunt reflects Leech Lake tribal members’ growing demands for change to clean, open, and accountable government.

The irony is that Hunt was elected on similar “reform” sentiments six years ago, shortly after the convictions of former chairman Tig Pemberton, secretary Daniel Brown, and tribal attorney and state senator Harold R. “Skip” Finn. All three were later imprisoned for stealing money from the Leech Lake band.

Resolving Red Lake crime problems will require sustained community action

October 4, 2002
Nine Red Lakers were charged, indicted, or pled guilty this week with violations of the Federal Major Crimes Act. This has to be some kind of abysmal record at Red Lake, one of the worst weeks in Red Lake’s history. As I recollect, even after the 1979 Revolution there weren’t nine people charged with violations of the major crimes act in one week.

Shakopee Mdewakanton enrollment problems, IIM problems endemic to BIA

September 27, 2002
We have printed Barbara Buttes letter addressing problems of Shakopee Mdewakanton enrollment in full because Dr. Buttes deals thoughtfully and in carefully documented detail with an issue that deeply affects the lives of Indian people.

New council at Red Lake takes steps toward recovery

September 13, 2002
It was sure a change to be at a Red Lake tribal council meeting where the council members got along and openly made information available to people so that “we, the people” could participate in our own government.

Get out and vote for Ed McGaa in Tuesday’s primary

September 6, 2002
That was quite a hatchet job the StarTribune did on Green Party U.S. Senate candidate Ed McGaa this week. For the state’s biggest daily to devote that much space and time to a relatively insignificant issue involving a third party primary election issue is burlesque

Reservation turmoil is symptomatic of deeper problems

August 30, 2002
In last week’s edition, Press/ON carried a story entitled “Crow Creek Sioux debate federal takeover,” in which members of the Crow Creek band sought to turn their tribe back over to the BIA because of excessive tribal indebtedness of $31 million. “We’re in the hole so deep … receivership is an option because we have no other way open to us,” one community leader is quoted as saying.

New Red Lake council generates positive vibes

August 16, 2002
It not only looked good, it felt good to see the new council members being sworn in at Red Lake. As they begin their new terms, it appears we have a council that not only can work together, but who will be more in tune with the concerns of membership, and who will be more open and accountable to us.

Red Lake voters and tribal council members deserve congratulation

July 19, 2002
First, I would like to congratulate the Red Lake tribal voters, who voted for change. We have apparently had enough of the egos, greed, deceptions, and self-interest of the King-Whitefeather council. The only incumbents whom the electorate felt worthy of being retained in office were Judy Roy and Toady Thunder. This is no doubt a recognition of their leadership in resisting some of the irresponsibility and chaos which swirled around them in the tribal council.

No one has been at financial controls for past four years

July 12, 2002
The preliminary report by the forensic auditors of the Red Lake Gaming Enterprises and recently released financial reports by newly elected tribal treasurer Darrell Seki for Red Lake Industries, Custom Doors and the General Fund certainly verifies that no one has been at the financial controls of the Red Lake Band for at least the past four years. This has been especially disastrous because of the shoot from-the-hip great economic leap forward campaign by the Whitefeather-King regime.

 

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